Remove ads on the forum by becoming a donating member. More here. |
---|
I’m curious about those ‘bunchy’ things in the first pic. What are they?Short but brisk walk of 4.5 k. around the Abbey of Mariënlof.
Thank you for posting these pics. Winnipeg is on my radar of places to visit, but I want to tie it in with a train ride to Churchill. Yes, in the winter too!I have a five week work contract in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Interesting coming from the west coast where early spring flowers are popping up, to a city still in winter. I’m enjoying it. Today some time to explore my neighbourhood on an urban walk with lots of warming tea stops! In the first and second photos you can see the phenomenal Canadian Museum for Human Rights.
View attachment 70671View attachment 70668View attachment 70669View attachment 70672View attachment 70673View attachment 70670
That is mistletoe!I’m curious about those ‘bunchy’ things in the first pic. What are they?
Thank you! I know of mistletoe and I’ve seen sprigs of it at Christmastime, but I‘m sure I’ve never seen it growing wild. I learned something new today.That is mistletoe!
Thank you! I know of mistletoe and I’ve seen sprigs of it at Christmastime, but I‘m sure I’ve never seen it growing wild. I learned something new today.
Thank you for posting these pics. Winnipeg is on my radar of places to visit, but I want to tie it in with a train ride to Churchill. Yes, in the winter too!
Thank you for this; the Canadian Museum for Human Rights is on my radar, but I was not aware of Louis Riel’s burial place.Churchill is high on my list too! On my walk yesterday, I stopped in at the train station, to check on times for the trip, thinking maybe I could do a day trip. Ha! It takes 2 days to go to Churchill and I only have one day off a week. Ah well...someday most certainly !! I'm really enjoying Winnipeg. Highly recommend the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. The last photo I posted is St. Boniface Cathedral where Louis Riel is buried.
No doubt much of this is along public pathways? How I envy you British folk your public pathways. I am almost green with envy3 years back, before I discovered the Camino, I hatched a plan whilst out on a walk. “How far could I walk from my house, using off road paths as much as possible, in a northerly direction from sunrise to sunset?” It intrigued me, and using a route plotting website I mapped out our route to take place on the the winter solstice. We found beautiful and interesting paths and walked through woodland, across nature reserves, parks, along the river Wandle, across the river Thames, through Hyde Park and finished (by good fortune) at Paddington station at sunset around 4.20pm after 33.8km. It was such a success, so I plotted another route, this time heading East on the day of the Spring equinox. This was a lot tougher, but nonetheless fun. A 6am start and a very undulating, wet walk, eventually led us onto the Pilgrims Way on the Surrey/Kent border. We finished about 20mins before sunset in a pub in Wrotham after 45km, where, being drenched through, we were pleased to find out there was a rail station down the road. One day, when I pluck up the courage, we will do the big one, south on the Summer Soltice from sunrise to sunset, and then complete the 4th, West on the Autumn equinox.
How I envy you British folk your public pathways
I tried and for the most part did. I brought our car to a garage for servicing and walked an hour and a half to get home along the town's main highway. Four hours later I walked back to pick the car up again.Take care @jungleboy !
Try to enjoy that small walk even when the surroundings are less nice than you want to.
I often walk our beach, thinking I'm looking across the Atlantic at Ireland, but in reality at MoroccoJust back from a walk on Dollymount Beach, North Dublin... A beautiful crisp day here with a mackerel speckled sky at times.
All ages out and aboutwalkingView attachment 68804
With my original plan to walk the CF next month (now dashed) I’ve been doing my own “Camino Boot Camp”, mixing it up with hikes with a dummy-weighted pack, 25 mile rides on my road bike, 7 mile runs and weight training. Despite the disappointment of cancelling, still keeping up the routine in the hope, Lord willing, this pandemic will run its course. Here are a couple of pics of my training hike on a beautiful Spring day in St Johns County, northeast Florida.Thanks to everyone who contributed in the 2019 thread about all the lovely local walks.
Let's continue in 2020.
The Minuteman National Historic Park - Always one for a bit of trivia, I have to mention that you missed the opportunity of telling us that during The American War of Independence, the minutemen were able to be battle ready in one minute, hence the name.Yesterday I did a 17 km walk. I asked Peg to bring me to Old North Bridge in Concord so I could walk home. The bridge is one of the sights in the Minuteman National Historical Park.
View attachment 71492View attachment 71493
Peg walked with me for a while.
Shortly after leaving the park we met a fellow, a park volunteer on a walk, who said that he was missing entertaining the visitors because of self isolation. (He was walking the other way on the other side of the road.) He gave us the opportunity to be entertained three ways, a history lesson, a science lesson or a song in one of 34 languages. We picked the song category and Peg asked for Catalan but he didn't know one in Catalan even though he spent a fair bit of time in Catalonia and at Monserrat when younger. We got one in Zulu instead and then that led to three different hymns sung to the same tune. This extrovert is going to have a really difficult time with the isolation.
Peg turned around shortly afterwards and I contined on. There were more people out walking than I normally encounter along this stretch. I must have come across a bit more than half a dozen singles or pairs over four hours.
Although I walked through suburban towns I had a good rural walk through woods by stitching together a number of parks, tree farms, town conservation areas and a wildlife refuge.
The militia dated back even earlier to what we called the French and Indian wars (and before that the Indian wars) put the younger, faster men in the minuteman category, good for example pursuing raiders that might have done kidnapping. The rest of the militia could take a longer time to gather to march to join other towns' militias. The oldest men would be around to escot townspeople to safer locations. Some of these, on the first day of armed conflict of the revolution, captured supply wagons on the way to the King's troops.The Minuteman National Historic Park - Always one for a bit of trivia ...
Last October I was walking from Barcelona to Pamplona. There were more than a couple of days where I was wishing I was hiking in New England instead. If you are in the US in the spring I recommend Virginia.(I really enjoyed my autumn visit to your neck of the woods a few years ago. The colours were spectacular.)
You have such a great eye, like many of your avian subjects. Quite beautiful.A restorative 12km walk this beautiful fresh spring morning with nature alive all around. I went very early to avoid being around too many people - a few other early risers out and all of us keeping distance but calling out “good morning” with lots of smiles. It felt good. Found a new hidden path behind a row of dense foliage along the tidal flats. Also discovered a nice grove of hazelnut trees. An odd thing - one of my favourite walking paths along the river has been fenced off, as a seaside village set is being built for a Netflix horror movieUnfortunately it will probably just be sitting there for a long time because the movie industry is closed here now.
View attachment 71537View attachment 71536View attachment 71538View attachment 71540View attachment 71539View attachment 71541View attachment 71542
I would really love to see your photos, I will try later on my laptop. Could have been my backyard, had I taken the £10.00 Assisted Passage from Scotland in 1969. Instead, I paid Aer Lingus the same for a one way ticket to Dublin. Therein lies the tale of a long life!I haven’t posted for some time despite lots of walking. This will probably be our last bushwalking club outing for a while as we go into lockdown this week
A fantastic 13km walk near Warburton, Victoria Australia. All at a safe distance apart. A few steepish climbs, beautiful eucalypts, tree ferns, fungi, even wombat poo. For all you non Aussies.... check it out, it’s square !!!!!! Heard a lyrebird but as usual couldn’t find it
Tunnels hand dug to reroute the river for gold mining in the 1860’s.
A real bushwalk, good both for the soul and the immune system.
I would really love to see your photos, I will try later on my laptop. Could have been my backyard, had I taken the £10.00 Assisted Passage from Scotland in 1969. Instead, I paid Aer Lingus the same for a one way ticket to Dublin. Therein lies the tale of a long life!
Beautiful photo's makes people happy in those dark timesMy now daily walk led me to cry a little when I saw the first item.
Might it have been a seagull who picked it out of the box? Surely not a human being...
Then I looked and drank in the second one.
I breathed a little better.
A friend sent me this and include it here, forgive me as it is not from a walk.
View attachment 71905
View attachment 71906 View attachment 71907
I am making the most of my one-a-day permitted exercise outing by driving into the nearby West Kent/East Sussex countryside and exploring the maze of public footpaths (4400 miles in Kent alone) which I have almost to myself. I walked in Brenchley Forest yesterday, in beautiful spring sunshine. Daffodils and primroses are out, the hedgerows are starting to green, and newborn lambs are appearing in the fields. The Earth is waking up, and its eternal cycle continues, oblivious to our cares.
Yes, at the moment anyway. I'm alone in the car and I drive somewhere where there's no-one around, so quite safe. Actually safer than walking in the neighbourhood of my home.You are still allowed to drive to another place to start your daily walk?
Yeah, I understand.I think I will go bananas if do 10,000 steps, so 2,000 will be enough for a start!
I don’t understand why the pictures don’t come in the right order...
Yikes! That looks like a kennel.You are so lucky, Rick.
Here is my stomping ground pro tem:
View attachment 72302View attachment 72303
7km today!
You are so lucky, Rick.
Here is my stomping ground pro tem:
View attachment 72302View attachment 72303
7km today!
You are so lucky, Rick.
Here is my stomping ground pro tem:
View attachment 72302View attachment 72303
7km today!
Actually, this morning I changed my tune. Instead of forcing myself to reach a km target, every step is for people I know and people I don't. I set my clock and so can go without counting. All I have to do is look up at the sky and you know, I am so much more fortunate - honestly - than someone stuck up in a block of flats with everybody else in the family, cooped up and snarling! Not that anyone on the forum fits that picture... No, I am truly thankful for being able to walk. One of my friends, since the age of five, is not so fortunate today, She is waiting in hospital for test results...A penitential walkabout in a prison exercise yard? I admire your fortitude, Kirkie: you're taking your detention very well!
Lovely photos Sabine. The rays of light above the freshly plowed field are beautiful!Grey but not cold at all. Sunday prediction is 20 Celsius .
A second long look ( and of course your previous photos) confirms my assessment that you have a most wonderful eye for photography, and thanks for sharing it with us all!Found a new path yesterday at Iona beach on the north arm of the Fraser river with trails through sand dunes and fields. Vibrant bird life and colour with several varieties of minuscule spring sand plants popping up.
View attachment 72393View attachment 72395View attachment 72392View attachment 72390View attachment 72396View attachment 72394View attachment 72391
Ohh @kirkie Thank you so much. Long morning walks with my camera are a big part of my new daily routine in this current way of lifeA second long look ( and of course your previous photos) confirms my assessment that you have a most wonderful eye for photography, and thanks for sharing it with us all!
oh so this was a kind of dog... my little brain is gaining vmom.vizsla
I've spent the last two nights out in the garden, with my binoculars, looking up at the sky while the International Space Station was clearly visible from Ireland. And then, when it had passed out of sight, I remained outside, immobile but moved by the magnificent post-pilgrim pleasure of stargazing. Following the Plough and the Stars is an astronomical reward for not being able to travel far from home this Easter: binoculars are far too heavy to carry on the camino.
So simple...so lovely!
Do you mean my pictures? I live in Norway, Mid-Norway. Thank you, by the wayPhotos are beautiful. What country were they taken in please?
Where there are blossoms...there is hope! Lovely!Today.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?